Showing posts with label closing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label closing. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Why CATCH ME Caught Me

Timing, they say, is everything.  And I can't help but wonder how different the fate of my favorite musical of last season, Catch Me If You Can, would be.  Had the show opened during the 2009 - 2010 season, I suspect that the Shaiman-Wittman-McNally musical would not have posted a closing notice after just 170 performances as it did today.  Even with the mixed reviews it got, I bet it would have swept the Tonys, and Memphis might not still be around.  At the very least, it would have offered considerable competition to a season that included Memphis, The Addams Family, Come Fly Away and Million Dollar Quartet.  Mind you, I genuinely enjoyed three of the four (it makes me sick to think MDQ has run longer that CMIYC).
Ah, well.  There is no point in getting bitter. It is what it is.  One imagines that despite an attendance rate that continues to hover around the 80% mark, an average ticket price under $70 must make turning a profit difficult.  After all, the show boasts a large cast and a large orchestra.  It can't be cheap.

Perhaps the most difficult thing to reconcile in my mind and heart, though, is that the things a lot of people didn't like about the show are the very things that drew me to it.  Here are 5 reasons why Catch Me caught me:
  • I did not go into it expecting the twisted, hilarious world of the composers-director-choreographer's previous outing, Hairspray.  I knew going in that it would probably as different from its predecessor as Sondheim/Lapine's Passion is from Sondheim/Lapine's Into the Woods.  The stories couldn't be more different, and their sources are polar opposites - John Waters' skewed but loving view of his childhood Baltimore couldn't possibly be like the psychologically off kilter world of a real-life teenager turned con artist all for the love of his parents.  To expect a silly romp out of Catch Me If You Can is, well, silly. 


  • I like an anti-hero.  The cold detachment and almost machine-like determination that is a heavy cloak over the troubled emotions of Frank Abagnale, Jr. is interesting to me.  It isn't just matinee idol Aaron Tveit, either.  You see, I can root for a guy who has drive, inner-fears, and a deep rooted need to please his parents.  And who can't feel for a kid who will literally do anything to get his folks back together?  For me, an instant bond and irrepressible warm fuzzies doesn't mean I'll love the show he is in.  It's the same reason why I am always drawn to the Javerts and not the Valjeans.


  • I like an adversary that I can warm up to, too.  Again, chalk it up to the Javert/Valjean thing, only in Catch Me you get BOTH!  Who can't find the fun in the rumpled workaholic with a heart of gold hidden beneath a heavy cloak of self-righteousness, political correctness and drive?  It helps that Hanratty is played with a sweet earnestness by Tony winner Norbert Leo Butz.


  • I love slick staging and pristine precision dance numbers that are sexy and daring, not fodder for the Lawrence Welk Show.  Jack O'Brien's amazing use of trap doors and sliding panels created a fast-paced world for Catch Me.  It moved as seamlessly and surprisingly as the actual cat and mouse game we were watching.  Oh, sure people bemoan the lack of tension,  There was plenty of tension in the audience both times I saw it, especially in the closing scene and even more so in the scene in the hotel where Hanratty and Abagnale come face to face for the first time, until the audience gave an audible sigh of relief and laugh when Aaron leaves Norbert there with a big bottle of ink and "sucker" written all over his face.  But I digress.  Equally eye-popping were the era evocative, high energy and high precision dance numbers created by Jerry Mitchell.  "Live in Living Color" was a great opening number, while "The Jet Set" set in stone iconic images from the film and book versions.  And of course, Hanratty's old fashioned Broadway showstopper, "Don't Break the Rules," is one of the season's biggest highlights.


  • And most of all, I love a high-concept, challenging show that is a slick as the characters in the show.  You see, I liked the concept of a 60's variety show to tell this story.  It is period perfect, and it makes the reasons for breaking into song and dance legitimate.  Perhaps best of all, it allows a certain sterile distancing between the real-life story and theatricalizing of the more commercially interesting highlights of a life on the run.  It makes one enjoy the razzle dazzle of the sharp dance numbers as we see young Abagnale become a pilot, a doctor, and almost a family man without becoming too enamored of it.  After all, he is a criminal.  That allows the more thoughtful and feeling moments - the ones not choreographed and staged with urgency, to draw us in with the emotional content.  Of course, that is the very thing that most people wanted and didn't get easily.  They wanted the razzle dazzle to be so much fun you could love the criminal Frank Jr. who is inherently more interesting than lost at sea teenager Frank Jr.  People wanted to love the bad guy like they love Roxie and Velma.  Ironic isn't it that this is exactly the point of both shows?  America loves a bad guy who gets away with stuff we can't in everyday life.  It is harder to find the entertainment value in a kid who is simply starved for approval and is too smart to be left to his own devices.


 


 
I love a challenge.  And I love when it is presented by people who know what they are doing.  And that is why I love Catch Me If You Can.

 

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Jeff
2.347

Saturday, June 25, 2011

The Post-Tonys Drop Off

Tomorrow marks two weeks since the Tony Awards, and the usual purging of theatres has begun as shows that are Tony-less limp off into history.  That is not to say that the picture is all bleak - the Tony winners seem to be doing OK, as is the first new show of the 2011 - 2012 season.

Naturally, there is always some post-Tony nominations drop off to get the ball rolling.  This year, it was limited to just one: Wonderland.  This was no surprise, really, considering the critical drubbing it got and the subsequent lack of audience interest.  It is a little surprising, though, that not one element of the show was deemed Tony nomination worthy.

This whole season has been full of limited-run plays and play revivals, and given that so many were/are star-driven vehicles, it looked like it would be a repeat of last season.  Then, a hue and cry went up from Broadway stage actors bemoaning the fact that these shows were doing the "grab it and go" thing, jacking up ticket prices so only the elite could attend, and loading them with TV and movie stars who get Tonys and leave, never to return, and having the show close before anyone could see it.  Yes, this season looked pretty much the same on paper.  But a funny thing happened on the way to repeat land.  The critical acclaim, if there was any, went largely ignored; the rest got uneven notices. 

But this year, the audience wasn't to be the fool.  No, this year audiences seemed to decide for themselves, ignoring the acclaim and letting their tastes (and limited pocket books, I'm sure) dictate which shows would stay or go.  (Ask the star-less but acclaimed shows Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson and The Scottsboro Boys tell you all about that!)  I'll bet no one was more surprised than the producers of That Championship Season and Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo that they weren't hot tickets.  Chock full of assumed box office gold in the likes of Robin Williams and Kiefer Sutherland, I'll bet they were all ready for Tony glory and pockets full of dough.  Instead, just one Tony nod between the two (for an unknown actor, mind you), and both shows have/will have finished their limited engagements with a whimper instead of a bang.  Add the much touted, audience ignored revival of Arcadia to the leave-on-time-but-who-even-noticed list.


So far, two limited runs have announced early closings, too.  Jim Belushi's debut vehicle, Born Yesterday, may have made a Broadway name for its female co-star, Nina Arianda, but it will be gone weeks early, closing tomorrow.  Tonight will be the closing performance of the three star (Ben Stiller, Edie Falco and Jennifer Jason Leigh) revival of The House of Blue Leaves, again closing weeks early.


Two shows that started as limited runs that got extended also announced closing this week: The Importance of Being Earnest and RAIN: The Beatles Experience on Broadway.  The former will cut its last extension by a week, while the former, which had been selling tickets into January, will now close September 4.  While neither got a Tony boost this season, neither could be called a flop by any definition, though.


The Motherfucker with the Hat went the conventional route, struggling, as most plays do, at the box office, despite a stellar cast, but becoming a sensation after a media blitz and several Tony nods.  The show would have closed today, but ticket demand was such that it extended through July 17.

And there are two other star vehicles we can deem a success, and even lament that they must close: John Leguizamo's one man show, Ghetto Klown , which twice extended, will end on July 9, and this year's Best Revival of a Play, The Normal Heart, will close as scheduled (so far, at least) on July 10.  To be fair, neither show was a hot ticket, playing to heavily discounted, decent attendance figures, but both shows, The Normal Heart especially, got box office bumps from the Tony telecast.  And it looks like plans are afoot for a tour and London engagement of the latter.


Things aren't much better over in London, either, with two high profile shoes announcing closings this week or so.  Love Never Dies will not be living up to its title or its predecessor, closing in August. You know what sucks about that?  The cast found out on the news like the rest of the public!  Priscilla Queen of the Desert went the more kind, gentle way, telling its cast that it will probably close at the end of the year, though no firm date has been chosen.  At least they can stay employed and look for future work, right?


Speaking of that show, it isn't doing boffo box office here, either, which is a shame, since it is probably the most fun show on Broadway at the moment, a feel good, heart-warming story, amazing spectacle and tunes they encourage you to sing and dance to.  You have to give them credit, though, for really trying - their ads are touting a Best Costumes Tony Award like it was a Best Musical win.  Good for them!

Of course, shows come and go, it is the Broadway circle of life.  Bonnie and Clyde and Follies wouldn't have homes, right?


Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.301

Monday, January 17, 2011

Feeling Electric: Next to Normal's Closing Performance

This season sure has been an exciting one of high, lows and everything in between.  In all of my years as a theatre goer, I don't think any other single season has afforded me such rare and varied experiences, all of which rate among the very top of my list.  But nothing really prepared me for the amazing thrill of last night's bittersweet closing performance of next to normal.


Outside the Booth Theatre, Sunday evening,
January 16, 2011

As any of you who read my blog regularly know, this show is among my absolute favorites of all time, and certainly my favorite amongst current shows.  I have championed this production from nearly the very beginning; from the first time I came alone to the Booth theatre, discovering the gem that it is, all the way through my 8th (or is it 9th?) and final trip last night.  Soaking in the original cast's energy and passion, feeling that sense that these characters were thoroughly soaked into them, rather than just the new clothing of new characters.  Watching Alice Ripley's brave, no holds barred, messy meltdown, or Jennifer Damiano's heartbreaking spiral out of control, or the shock and bitter sadness at finding out for the first time that Aaron Tveit's vibrant performance was really that of a long lost child, were certainly thrills of those first visits.  Discovering not only the genuine brilliance of understudy Jessica Phillips, but also the strength of the rest of the company, particularly J. Robert Spencer, as they rose to the occasion and embraced a decidedly different take on the role of Diana.  And, finally, the absolute thrill of watching a mostly new "family" bring this brutally honest story to life - Marin Mazzie and Jason Danieley not only kept the show running, they breathed new life into the piece.  And the sensual menace of Kyle Dean Massey and the maddening stolid, angry performance of Meghann Fahy brought out new and troubling depths to their characters.  Finally, through it all - cast absences, awards won and lost, cast changes and everything else one could throw at a small, daring musical, Louis Dobson and Adam Chanler-Berat went with every punch and curve ball and ultimately, through the course of the show's entire run, provided a solid foundation of support, familiarity and a willingness to reexamine characters that had long been ingrained into their "acting bones." 

Those hoping for ticket cancellations braved the
frigid temperatures for the chance at one last ticket.

And the brilliance of the piece as theatre - design elements (sets, lights and costumes) perfectly in sync, the direction so spare and tight, full of meaning through every labored push of the dining room table down stage, to the dangerous swinging and desperate cling to every support beam on the structure, to the frantic runs up and down those staircases - has been a true joy to behold as fan, student, and practitioner of theatre.

Bringing all of that previous experience to this final experience was something I think I really needed.  People often speak of shows that they could relate to, that changed their lives, that forced them to reexamine their own lives and relationships.  For me, next to normal, was all of that and more.  Finally understanding some of my beloved grandmother's quirks and short-comings because of the show certainly helped me get a grasp on my own upbringing and reaffirmed my love for her, was well as a better understanding of why my mother (her daughter) both adored and hated her own mother.  Then, too, is watching a family face and deal with what is a mountain of issues and still survive, albeit broken, but not unfixable, brought with it a personal sense of appreciation for my own family, together, struggling at times, but still together.

The closing night audience files in.

And so, even as we lined up down 45th street under the darkened marquees of recently closed productions, the feeling of excitement and expectation filled the air, as we, mostly longtime fans and repeat customers (I can only imagine what first timers to the show must have thought, right?) filed in for our last visit to the Goodman home at the Booth Theatre on Broadway.  Maybe it was me imposing my own feelings on everything I saw, but the entire house staff had the look of happiness and sadness all at once on their faces.  Did the merchandise girl really look upset as she announced that all that was left of the show t-shirts was double X size and that was all they had left in stock, period?  Was it me, or did the usher's voice catch a little as he handed me my Playbill and talk-whispered, "I hope you enjoy the show"?

As we waited for the performance to begin, it was an honor to see Michael Greif shaking hands of well-wishers, and a sense of celebration as Tim Kitt hugged, took pictures with and signed Playbills for anyone who asked, and a real sense of "full circle" as Greif, Kitt and Brian Yorkey met with original workshop member Anthony Rapp in that odd little center aisle of the orchestra section at the Booth. 

The arrival of the musicians onstage was greeted with thunderous applause and screaming cheers of appreciation.  And then it suddenly stopped.  For the last time that evening the audience was completely silent, as if we, as one, were paying our final respects to a true friend.  Then, those first notes began, and the entire musical beginning to the show was lost amid the screams and cheers.  Lights up on a worrying Marin Mazzie and a coming in late Kyle Dean Massey, and the applause began, stopping maybe a full 2 minutes or more later, each actor trying to maintain composure and some semblance of their pre-show character preparation.  Still, from up close, you could see them both struggling to remain even simply composed, and finally giving in to the roar of love and approval being given them.  The scene started shakily, but within a line or two things were right on track.  That is until Jason Danieley's entrance again stopped the show for a good minute, the band vamping their hands off.  Then came the thunderous ovation for Meghann Fahy, who, I have to say, at that point was the picture of professionalism.  Similar ovations greeted both Adam Chanler-Berat and a truly bewildered looking Louis Hobson.

Soon the show itself took over, and the cast attacked the piece with elegance and style - nothing added for the final show, no real breaks in character (until the very end).  No, it was to be a next to normal that everyone got every time they saw it fresh.  Except it was much more.  Marin Mazzie, in particular, gave a riveting, gutsy, angry and almost disturbingly fierce performance, and every actor took her lead.  Meghann Fahy, knowing how Natalie must parallel Diana, matched each piercing barb, frantic plea and desperate reach right down the line.  Similarly, Jason Danieley and Adam Chanler-Berat connected in the most emotionally intense ways.  And I am certain that neither Kyle Dean Massey nor Louis Hobson were ever more intensely "alive" and "rock star," respectively, at any other performance I had seen.

An ovation for longest-running cast member,
Adam Chanler-Berat.

Throughout the entire performance key scenes and songs were applauded.  The show stopped several times as the audience showered "I Miss the Mountains,"  "Superboy and the Invisible Girl," and "I'm Alive," and others.  The "Catch Me I'm Falling" sequence got a very strong hand, as did Dan and Diana's act two argument that ends with the music box shattered and their lives finally torn apart.  But the three biggest hands of the evening had to be following "You Don't Know/I Am the One" - which I have never seen so expertly delivered, the final "Light" sequence, and perhaps most touchingly, the scene between Henry and Natalie when she arrives at the dance.  Mr. Chanler-Berat valiantly tried to not let the overwhelming emotions of the moment get the best of him, but he began to cry, Meghann Fahy began to cry, and all but the most stolid in the audience began to cry.  It was a true familial catharsis, and we together mourned an impending loss and revelled in the unique bond between cast members and their adoring audience.  The final number was far from over as the audience rose to its feet and, tears pouring down faces, bravely reached the end and final blackout together. (I should say that as I type this, I am crying, again.)

Producer David Stone takes the stage to
give a closing night speech.

The company watches as their producer
pays tribute to them and their next to normal family.

As the company took several bows, producer David Stone took the stage to deliver an eloquent, and brief, but very heartfelt and emotional thank you speech.  As you could hear audience members continue to sob, and as the cast hugged, cried and congratulated each other, Mr. Stone continued.  At several points during his farewell, the audience gave standing ovations - to cast and company, to Adam Chanler-Berat, the only cast member to have been with the show through its entire 3 and a half year gestation, to Michael Greif, and to both Brian Yorkey and Tim Kitt, who looked like proud new fathers and overwhelmed with emotion at the same time.  The cast took a final bow, waved, blew kisses to us and the clung to each other as they left the stage.  And, fittingly, the majority of the audience remained standing and not moving until the band completed its final walk out.  They received the final ovation of the night.  I don't think a single person at the Booth Theatre last night felt anything less than electric.

If you click to enlarge this picture, you can make
out Tom Kitt, who is almost dead center in the photo,
and Brian Yorkey about 3 seats back.

I am personally sad that something I love so much is no longer.  Like a death in the family, I miss it very much already, but take great solace in the fact that this show will live on for years in hundreds of new and exciting productions.  Such is both the beauty and the downfall of live theatre.  I am a better, different person because of the show.  And I am grateful that from now on, I will always recognize that normal is too far away, but something next to normal can be pretty amazing.


(Photos by my buddy Mike, who is the reason I got to see and have this amazing final experience.  I will love you, Michael, for many things over the course of our lives, but this night will always be among my most cherished.)

Comments? Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com, or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.139

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Goodbye, Old Friends: Part II

By the time Sunday is over, a full dozen (or baker's dozen potentially) Broadway shows will have closed since the ball dropped in Times Square signalling the start of 2011.  Last week it was 8 shows, this week it is 4 (5, sorta), and there are still more to come before February starts.  Here's a look at the shows closing this week on Broadway - a complete stranger to me, a regrettable missed opportunity, and two dear friends (plus a little love/hate).


A Free Man of Color
Opened: November 18, 2010
Previews: 29     Performances: 61
My Review Grade: I didn't see this show.
Closing Thoughts: Man, Lincoln Center Theatre can't seem to catch a break this season.  First there was Verge, and now this ambitious play about a difficult subject, told in an entertaining, if muddled, way.  The critics groused and the non-subscribers stayed away.  At least this one made it through its scheduled run.  I have a feeling the next LCT show, War Horse, will be a hotter ticket.  I hope I'm right.


In the Heights
Opened: February 14, 2008
Previews: 29     Performances: 1184
My Review Grade: Had I had my blog going when I saw the original cast, it would have definitely been A+
Closing Thoughts:  What a pleasant, unexpected treat of a show!  The perfect combination of old-fashioned storytelling, characters you care about, modern points of view and sizzling hot music, this show hit all the right notes.  And with it came an important new voice in American musical theatre in Lin-Manuel Miranda.  I can not wait to see what is next from this amazing young man.  And over the years, we've been re-introduced to a real gem in Priscilla Lopez, careers solidified in Andrea Burns and choreographer Andy Blankenbeuhler, and a host of new favorites: Karen Olivo, Olga Meredez, Robin de Jesus, Mandy Gonzalez, Cristopher Jackson, Michael Balderrama, Janet Dacal, and from the ensemble Krysta Rodriguez and Joshua Henry.  Pretty impressive!  More impressive: and original story, original score, new writer who all take off-Broadway by storm, take over Broadway and take home the top prize, Best Musical.  You will be missed, all of you.


La Bete
Opened: October 14, 2010
Previews: 24     Performances: 101
My Review Grade: Unfortunately, I never got to this one.
Closing Thoughts:  An artful, atypical evening of theatre, this play intrigued me way back when it originally ran.  The revival, boasting some incredible talents, Tony winners David Hyde Pierce and Mark Rylance, and TV star Joanna Lumley, after a smash hit run in London looked a sure thing for Broadway.  The critics here raved, particularly over Mark Rylance's 20 minute monologue.  And still no one showed.  The limited engagement was cut short by several weeks.  Add this one to my list of regrets.


A Little Night Music
Opened: December 13, 2009
Previews: 20     Performances: 425
My Review Grade: Original Revival Cast: A+; Replacement Cast: B
Closing Thoughts:  I am in the minority about two things as far as this revival goes: I love the minimalist approach of the entire production, and I was terribly disappointed and underwhelmed by its stellar replacement leads.  Still, I adored the original company:  one actress I love (Catherine Zeta-Jones), one I worship (Angela Lansbury), a new actor to admire in Alexander Hanson, a great reunion with old favorites Aaron Lazar and Erin Davie, and some new folks to watch for in Leigh Ann Larkin and Hunter Ryan Herdlicka.  I love both Bernadette Peters and Elaine Stritch, but I found the former to be way too affected and the latter's embrace of being ill-prepared to be insulting to her audience and to all actors of age.


Rock of Ages
Opened: March 17, 2009
Previews: 22     Previews: 735
My Review Grade: C+
Closing Thoughts:  Given that I am a child of the 80's, and that I worshipped at the altar of Xanadu, You'd have thought this one would be a favorite of mine.  WRONG!  Bad acting and a stupid, overly-complicated plot ruined a beautifully sung and danced score of 80's rockin' hits.  (I LOVE THE CAST RECORDING!)  A hit off-Broadway and with the drunken sub-culture of Broadway audiences, this show is allegedly going to reopen at the Helen Hayes after a three month break.  The current tenant of that theatre just announced another extension, into March.  Hmmm...  Maybe it'll re-open off-Broadway?  On Broadway in April?  I hope so, because I hate to think of so many folks losing jobs.  But just in case it doesn't, here is its closing tribute.  I wanted my MTV... I didn't get it.


Comments about anything but Rock of Ages - get over it people, I don't like it and calling me names and questioning my bathroom habits won't make me love it - leave them here, email me at jkstheatrescene@yahoo.com or Tweet me!
Jeff
2.130

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Goodbye Old Friends, Part I

Let the "Great Broadway Shut Down of 2011" begin.  Just as shows close after the Tonys each spring, a bunch of shows usually close after the holidays as Broadway hunkers down for the cold, lonely winter.  It is an annual cycle, one which allows theatres to become available for that next big hit.

Still, this year seems very brutal, with 14 shows scheduled to close before February starts.  A lot of them are limited engagements, a problem in and of itself.  A few are long timers who just ran out of steam.  And a few, most problematically to my mind, are brand new shows that never caught on with audiences.

Today, we mourn the loss of 8 Broadway shows.  EIGHT!   As the lights dim and each becomes a memory of Broadway history, here are my thoughts:


Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson
Opened: October 13, 2010
Previews: 26     Performances: 94
My Review Grade: A
My Thoughts:  While I can understand the thinking behind saying things like "this show is too off-Broadway for Broadway," I think it is wrong to perpetuate the notion that Broadway audiences can't handle something a-typical and boundary pushing.  Heck, isn't that what most theatre fans beg for?  Well, they gave it to us with this show, and no one showed up.  Like it or not, it was different and fresh and deserved more attention.  Shame on us.  Still, we got a set of hot new writers and director in Michael Friedman and Alex Timbers, and a brand new Broadway Male Star in Benjamin Walker.  And can you beat the tag line, "History just got all sexy pants!"?  An open run sadly cut short.


Brief Encounter
Opened: September 28, 2010
Previews: 21     Performances: 119
My Review Grade: A+
My Thoughts: Director/writer Emma Rice spun gold out of two middling Noel Coward pieces, combing them into a glib, romantic and thrillingly theatrical evening.  Noel would be thrilled.  The visuals were stunning and memorable, but instead of overwhelming the story, it only enhanced it.  The show was part of the Roundabout season, and so was only ever to be a limited engagement, and it was extended at that.


Elf: The Musical
Opened: November 14, 2010
Previews: 15     Performances: 58
My Review Grade: A
My Thoughts: Finally, a holiday show that I would like to see again, and any time of the year.  My love affair with writers Chad Begeulin and Matthew Sklar, as well as Amy Spanger.  And Sebastian Arcelus is at the top of my favorites list.  A limited engagement always, the show made a ton at the box office - I hope it recoups - and I really wouldn't mind it if it showed up this time next year.


Fela!
Opened: November 23, 2009
Previews: 34     Performances: 462
My Review Grade: I didn't see this one.
My Thoughts:  You could have knocked me over with a feather back in the fall when it was announced that the show would close so soon.  I can only judge by people's reactions, many of whom put the show on their best of the year lists in 09 and 10.  Still, a unique entertainment that lasted this long is to be commended.  When it opened off-Broadway, did they really think Broadway, London and National Tour?


The Pee-Wee Herman Show
Opened: November 11, 2010
Previews: 18     Performances: 62
My Review Grade: I didn't see this one.
My Thoughts:  A hit show is a hit show, right?  Lots of people just a bit younger than I am went, loved it, and would never have dreamed of seeing a Broadway show before this.  Maybe Pee-Wee has birthed a few life long theatre goers.  A limited engagement that was extended and recouped is a great thing these days.


Promises, Promises
Opened: April 25, 2010
Previews: 30     Performances: 291
My Review Grade: A+
My Thoughts: I loved this show and will miss it terribly.  I won't dwell on the controversies that plagued the show.  But it did provide me with two unforgettable experiences that I will cherish always: Kristin Chenoweth Tweeting about my review, and later, meeting her at the stage door to thank her.  She actually stopped for more than a minute to shake hands and speak to me.  People looked at me like I was a star.  And I was smitten all over again!  Too short a run for a great old-fashioned, beautifully staged musical.


West Side Story
Opened: March 19, 2009
Previews: 27     Performances: 748
My Review Grade: A+
My Thoughts: This classic is one of my all time favorites, and a staging that recreated the original was both nostalgic and profound.  The dancing was as breathtaking as I always imagined.  I didn't even mind the Spanish.  And how many shows get better when replacements come in?  This is one show I wish I had gotten to one more time.


Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown
Opened: November 4, 2010
Previews: 30     Performances: 69
My Review Grade: I didn't formally review the 2nd preview - I had hoped to get back to it on the 16th.  But even as it was, I'd have given it a B- at the 2nd preview.
My Thoughts:  Congratulations, Internet rats!  You finally killed one before it got off the ground.  OK, it probably still lacked some how (Sherie Rene Scott was miscast, and really not good.  It wasn't the material.) as it was busy, but never frenzied.  Ultimately, it was a mix of circumstances, including unrealistic expectations that killed this one.  Still, it was a lot of fun and a thrill to see such talent all a one time.
Prediction: Laura Benanti will be Tony nominated and could even win.

Comments?  Leave one here, email me at jkstheatrescene or Tweet me!@yahoo.com
Jeff
2.124

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Broadway's Annual Post-Holiday Cleaning

UPDATED: See items in RED.

With yesterday’s announcement/confirmation that next to normal will be closing on January 16, I really took a closer look at Broadway’s annual post-holiday freeze. (Before I forget, thank you to those of you who sent me “condolences” on the closing of my favorite show. It is nice to know that I won’t be mourning alone!)

Yes, every year at this time, Broadway cleans out the old, the broken, the never-worked-in-the-first-place, freeing up space for the new spring crop of shows. A similar cleanse happens post Tony Awards. So it comes as no surprise that one is getting ready this January. Except that this year’s loss seems particularly acute - 14 shows are currently scheduled to close during the month of January!

The New Year will start out especially harshly.

January 2:
Brief Encounter (*, +)
Elf: The Musical (~)
Fela!
The Pee-Wee Herman Show (*)
Promises, Promises (*)
West Side Story


January 8:
Colin Quinn: Long Story Short (~)

January 9:
A Free Man of Color (+)
In the Heights
La Bete (~)
A Little Night Music
The Merchant of Venice (~) (According to The New York Times, in talks to extend. (11/18/2010))



January 16:
next to normal
The 39 Steps

January 23:
Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (+)

January 29:
Driving Miss Daisy (~) (11/12/2010: In talks with the stars to extend the run into spring.)

Barring any further extensions, the list doesn’t really hold that many surprises. Three of the shows are closing after extending their runs beyond the expected closing. (*) Three of them are a part of subscription series, and their runs were already potentially limited to begin with. (+) And five of the shows were limited engagements to begin with. (~)

The good news is that there are shows already lined up to take the place of all but four of these theatres: the Booth, Walter Kerr, Richard Rodgers and Belasco. (Make that threeThe Richard Rodgers will be home to Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, starring Robin Williams.)

Of the rest, we are losing some shows with incredible success stories - In the Heights is the American Theatre Dream personified. And would anyone have guessed that West Side Story would surpass its original Broadway run? Or that next to normal would have run for 733 performances? And we all know the A Little Night Music’s days were numbered well before this closing date. It was supposed to have closed when its original stars departed, remember? Promises, Promises' fate was sealed when the critics didn’t drool over Kristin Chenoweth, so all this extra time, courtesy of the stars themselves has been a gift. So maybe the only real surprise here is Fela!, the critically acclaimed production, which should have at least lasted a year, right?

And so it is sad to see all of these shows go. But if shows don’t close, new ones can’t open, right? Of course, right!


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Jeff
2.72

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Another One Bites the Dust

I can't say I am surprised, but I can say I am disappointed.  Come Fly Away, the Tharp-Sinatra dance musical, will play its last performance September 5 at the Marquis Theatre.  That leaves you with just 52 chances to see this show (as of today).

Only the second non-scheduled closing of a show (Next Fall being the other), post-Tonys, for weeks the show has been among the lowest in percent of attendance.  The week of July 19 - 25, it was at 49%, with only Race pulling in lower numbers.  Interestingly, it is still managing to gross more than 1/2 a million dollars each week ($547,485 last week), and it still has an average paid admission of $91.03.  Does that mean that a large number of patrons are still paying full price?  That average seems kinda high, all things considered.  Still the numbers are what they are, and they are not enough to warrant use of the cavernous Marquis.



The show got only two Tony nominations, both well-deserved: Twyla Tharp for Outstanding Choreography and Karine Plantadit (above, center) for Best Featured Actress in a Musical.  It won neither.

Personally, I loved the show and still recommend trying to get to see it.  This caliber of dancing is becoming rarer on Broadway, really.  You can read my complete review here.  I'll admit that a wordless musical, where the connection between the song and the action is not always clear, and where the story line is really there, but only if you look for it, can be a lot to ask of an audience.  I love that challenge.  And I always have to laugh when someone laments that shows don't ask much of their audiences anymore.  Because here is a show that asks a lot, and still no one came.


I suspect that the national tour, set to begin in May 2011 in Chicago, should do OK on the road, as middle (and aging) America loves its Sinatra, and the show even looks a tad like the the Lawrence Welk Show (though act two should get the blue-haired old ladies a-chattering).

And so this leaves us with our next question:  Which show will be the next to go?  I'm going to go with Million Dollar Quartet, which has no reason to be running as long as it has already.  (Race and Lend Me a Tenor are already scheduled to end, at the end of contracts, August 23 and 15, respectively.)

And I'm betting a big splashy musical - Priscilla: Queen of the Desert - will snap up the Marquis in a hurry!


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Jeff